KILO NOVEMBER
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,068
- Location
- Hurricane Coast Florida
I'm told that musicians refer to flute players as "flautists". Go figure.
That was the term I was prepared to use, but I looked it up just to make sure I was right and the 'Net says "flautists" and "flutists" are both correct. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯I'm told that musicians refer to flute players as "flautists". Go figure.
That was the term I was prepared to use, but I looked it up just to make sure I was right and the 'Net says "flautists" and "flutists" are both correct. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Maybe when they're flautulent.So, nobody actually plays a flaut?
Re recent car woe (see post 13834)
Complained like a fishwife about the company's stance of the situation not being a safety concern, and I reminded them in no uncertain terms of the current environment. They ended up covering the cost of the motor which essentially cut the cost in half. In the end, I'm good with that, but I'm still miffed on principle.
But I gotta admit that I was intrigued by an itty-bitty two-seater Suzuki with roll bars I spotted in a parking lot a few days back. It was a model I’d never seen before, apparently never sold in the U.S. This thing was pocket-sized, smaller than a vintage MG Midget or A-H Sprite. Bet it’s a blast to drive.
Not really qualified to speak from personal knowledge… but I’ve heard that those Jaguar V-12 engines are black holes of maintenance costs. I can easily imagine it. Any truth? Or is this a trope circulated by those who hate the beautiful lines of the vehicle.
^^^^^
Looked it up. It’s a Suzuki Cappuccino, made for the domestic Japanese market and to meet “Kei” car standards for sub-sub-compacts. Produced 1991 thru ’98 model years.
A 657 cc three-cylinder DOHC 12-valve turbocharged engine. Puts out 65 hp. That’s plenty for a car that weighs 1500 lbs and for which economy is much the point.
View attachment 399867
When I saw the MX-5 Mazda it made me wonder why MG and others, thought that the two seater was history. That car is the best MG that never was.
Why are radio announcers, or perhaps more on point, the engineers behind them, so seemingly smitten with cranking up the bass on the microphone? Is it supposed to somehow impress? Convey commanding power? Credibility? (No, you need an English accent for that.) Erudition? Apparently they don't realize that with such a booming bass not a single word that is being said can be understood.
The smallest car I've ever been in was a Suzuki Samurai. It was known as the "Jimny" in Japan, and made it's way to North America back in 1985. Killing time before a movie, a friend and I visited a dealership to take a look. Sitting in the front seat, we made the mistake of trying to close both doors at the same time and found ourselves literally wedged door-to-shoulder-to-shoulder-to-door inside the silly little thing. No wonder they didn't sell well here.^^^^^
Looked it up. It’s a Suzuki Cappuccino, made for the domestic Japanese market and to meet “Kei” car standards for sub-sub-compacts. Produced 1991 thru ’98 model years.